Paveway IV

Paveway IV

A Paveway IV laser-guided bomb fitted to a Harrier GR9.
Type Precision-guided munition
Place of origin United Kingdom
Service history
In service 2008
Used by Royal Air Force
Royal Saudi Air Force
Wars Operation Herrick
Operation Ellamy
Operation Shader
Production history
Manufacturer Raytheon UK
Specifications
Weight 500 lb (230 kg)

Guidance
system
Inertial, GPS Aided Inertial and/or Semi-Active Laser
Launch
platform
British Aerospace Harrier II
Panavia Tornado
Eurofighter Typhoon[1]

Paveway IV is a dual mode GPS/INS and laser-guided bomb manufactured by Raytheon UK (formerly Raytheon Systems Limited).[1] It is the latest iteration of the Paveway series.

The weapon is a guidance kit based on the existing Enhanced Paveway II Enhanced Computer Control Group (ECCG) added to a modified Mk 82 general-purpose bomb with increased penetration performance. The new ECCG contains a Height of Burst (HOB) sensor enabling air burst fusing options, and a SAASM (Selective Availability Anti Spoofing Module) compliant GPS receiver. It can be launched either IMU (Inertial Measurement Unit) only, given sufficiently good Transfer Alignment, or using GPS guidance. Terminal laser guidance is available in either navigation mode.

The Paveway IV entered service with the Royal Air Force in 2008.[2] It has yet to be accepted into service with the United States, which has pursued the development of the Laser-JDAM and dual mode Small-Diameter Bomb (SDB).

The Paveway IV's first export sale was to the Royal Saudi Air Force in a deal worth approximately £150 million (US $247 million).[3] The deal had been delayed for several years by the U.S. State Department which had to authorise the bomb's sale due to its use of American components. A contract was signed in December 2013 with Congressional approval given two months later, with deliveries to begin within 18 months.[4]

The Paveway IV was first used operationally by the Royal Air Force during Operation Herrick in Afghanistan. It was later used operationally during Operation Ellamy in Libya.[1] In September 2014, a Tornado GR4 of the Royal Air Force dropped a Paveway IV bomb on a heavy weapon position operated by Islamic State militants in northwest Iraq, marking the first engagement of the British military against IS targets.[5] Eurofighter Typhoons of the Royal Saudi Air Force have also dropped Paveway IV's on ISIL targets in Syria.[6]

Raytheon UK is conducting preparatory work to equip the Paveway IV with a bunker-busting warhead as part of the Selective Precision Effects At Range (Spear) Capability 1 program. The compact penetrator has the same outer mold line and mass of the regular Paveway IV and uses a discarding shroud design. A penetrating 500 lb Paveway IV would replace the RAF's previous 2,000 lb Paveway III bunker buster.[7]

Operators

 Saudi Arabia[3]
 United Kingdom

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Paveway IV". Royal Air Force. Retrieved 7 January 2015.
  2. "Paveway IV Smart Bomb Enters Service with Royal Navy and Royal Air Force". Deagel.com. 10 December 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2015.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Saudi Arabia becomes first Paveway IV export customer". IHS Jane's. 25 March 2014. Retrieved 7 January 2015.
  4. "Raytheon Secures First Export for Paveway IV". Defense News. 25 March 2014. Retrieved 7 January 2015.
  5. RAF Tornados strike first Islamic State targets - Flightglobal.com, 30 September 2014
  6. "Saudi Typhoons Use Paveway IV Bombs on ISIS". Defense News. 25 February 2015. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
  7. RAF To Be Equipped With Bunker Busting Version of Paveway IV - Defensenews.com, 18 November 2014

External links